Common Paraphrasing Mistakes
What NOT to Do
Mistake 1: Patchwork Plagiarism
Simply swapping a few words with synonyms while keeping the same sentence structure. This is the most common form of unintentional plagiarism.
Original: "The results indicate that regular exercise significantly reduces symptoms of depression."
Bad: "The findings show that consistent physical activity substantially decreases signs of depression." (Same structure, just synonym swaps)
Good: "Depression symptoms showed marked improvement in participants who maintained consistent exercise routines, according to the study's findings."
Mistake 2: Forgetting to Cite
Even perfectly paraphrased content needs a citation. The ideas still belong to the original author.
Mistake 3: Changing the Meaning
In the effort to use different words, some writers accidentally distort the original meaning. Always verify accuracy after paraphrasing.
Mistake 4: Over-Paraphrasing
Sometimes a direct quote is better, especially for technical definitions, famous phrases, or when the original wording is particularly powerful or precise.